Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 29, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1883 — Page 2

THE INDIANA ST a SEKTINSL. WEDtfSSlW' l&OInR 4JC,

TI

DIANA

STATE SIT Ii.

1883 FOR THE EAR 1884 An uncompromising enemy of Monopolies in whatever form appearing, and especially to the spirit of subsidy as embodied in the present THIEVING TABIFP. THE SEUTKiEIi is the recognized leading Democratic newspaper of the State. Many new and improved features have been introduced, making it in all respects a Superior 8-Page SB-Column Paper, This Enlarged Edition will be furnished, Postage Free, at ONE DOLLAR It will contain well considered edl"torials on every subject, political or social, which may arise. The Commercial and Market Heoorts of the Weekly Sentinel will be complete. Its Agricultural and Home Departments are in the best of hands, and will be a distinguishing feature. In a word, in its news, its editorials, literary, miscellany, and in its general reading, it shall not be surpassed by any paper circulated in the State. It will be particularly adapted to the family circle. Ho thinking man in the State can afford to do without the WEEKLY SENTINEL, at the small cost at which it Is furnished.; THE SENTINEL, in addition to its superiority, is, moreover, an Indiana paper, devoted to and especially represents Indiana's interests, political and otherwise, as no foreign paper will or can do, and ought, thereforo, to have preference over the papers of other States, and we ask Democrats to bear this in mind, and Select Their On State faper When they come to take subscriptions and make up clubs. The Impending Conflict. The recent election! have revealed political conditions which will, without doubt, maie the Presldtntial election next fall the greatest political conflict of our history. It la due to truth to say that the conditions shown are such that each party may reasonably believe that It can succeed by mighty effort, Eere In Indiana, as In '76 and 'SO, will he enacted a irJgbty struggle. The corrupt party which has been for nearly a generation fattening upon spoils and plunder, will go from Ita long possession of a Canaan flowing With the Bilk and honey of spoils, only when it has exhausted its utmost endeavors to stay. The country la no stranger to the character and variety of means brought Into requisition where Republican monopolists, bosses and plunderers, unitedly make an effort. Fellow Democrats, there are conditions upon which we may reasonably reckon a probable success. These conditions, and they are the only ones, are a united and great effort. Every bhocldkh to THK WHEEL Even now the conflict Is in the air. TnE SENTINEL will contribute ita best effort to the end 1 a grand Democratic victory. IU work can be best done when a weekly visitoi to every Democratic home, hence we ask to b cone such visitor, and add that now is the time for every Democrat ia the State to subscribe lor the Sentinel. TERMS WEEKLY. Slnsds Copy, without Premium. Club of 11 tor ." Club of X 3. - Club of 30.. . S 1.00 10.00 20.00 25.50 DAILY. On Copy, On Var Ob Copy, Six Months.. Om Copy, ThrM Months On Codt. One ftontn, ... tüVDAT BdYLNEL B MAIL, 2.00. Agents making up Clubs send foi any lxxf&rmatlon desired Address Indianapolis Sentinel Co.

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20. Wosdeb how the squirrels that did not lay in the hickory nuts are getting along. Vennor fooled them ditto the niuskrats. IIfee is the boss bachelor. Ile'a a Mr. Felder, 103 years old. His address, ladies, is Clinton, S. C. 1SS 4 is leap year. Sail in! 'The beautiful snow" came in force this time. "What was Vennor thinking about when he had all the snow banked up for March? Axt attempt to execute laws enacted against polygamy will be resisted to the bitter end. fosay the Mormons, and they ought to know. Make the outrage of women and girls punishable by death. It is so punishable now, often, but the matter should be taken out of the hands of Judge Lynch. Mr. Chairman Barnim is in Chicago and it is said to "siee up" the pretensions of the place with a view to holding the National Democratic Convention there. A Maeio.v (Ind.) correspondent of the New York Tribune, "V. T. A.," is trying to start up the Greshara boom once more. It is difficult work. It makes him blow. Tin present Congress is said to be the most temperate that ever assembled in Washington City so distressingly abstemious that barkeepers anticipate business disasters. Si'eakf.r Carlisle's home is within a mile and a half of the center of population in the United States, and the men who elected him represent districts that contain two-thirds of the population of the Union. "I want you to remember." writes a Horton novelist, "that I'm a human bein'." That looks bad for Boston "culchaw." He might have spelled ''bein' with an "a" instead of an "i,"' anyhow. It would have localized more naturally. A Scotch milkman was recently convicted of selling milk whieti bad stood in the room in which a child was ill with the scarlet feyer. The milk absorbed the poison, ami seventeen persons wero infected with the disease, four of whom died. TisF.F.E was a lively debate in the South Carolina Senate last week over a proposed law to permit divorces in that State. It was in a fair way to success when an amendment was adopted providir.p that after divorce neither party could marry ajrain during the life of the other. This defeated the whole rueaMire. I.otta was hissed in a London theater Saturday niht. She was playiug "Musette," and introduced the "Sweet by and by." The London folks thought it was a burlesque on a religious song as sung by Moody and Sankey and would not have it that way. I.otta retired in bad form. A YfivNo pirl was turned out of Sundayschool recently, at Jamaica, Long Island, for giving dancing lessons. Some good girls always fiits at the bead of the Sunday-school class, however, and swings on the front gate at the same time, or courts in darkened parlors, where there ia none to molest or make afraid. I at the Cherry Lake settlement, Florida, last week, while the mourners were singing and praying around a colored woman for w hom an undertaker wa3 digging a grave, she sprang from her coffin shouting, "I ain't dead yet! I ain't dead yet!" But the shock was too much for her, and she is now a lunatic. Our Washington correspondent says that W. P. Drownlow, Doorkeeper of the late liepublican Congress, carried on the pay-rolls fictitious names, for which he drew salaries and pocketed the money. He saw Dorsey and his gang getting away with so much he thought that it was his "put in." He is a Southern white Republican. United States Senator Plumb, who represents the State of Kansas, subscribes to over 200 newspapers. He finds some iteni3 of interest in all, and it is the general impression anions journalists that through the agency of the press tfie gentleman secured the Senatorial robes that he now wears so gracefully. His newspaper file is cot complete without the Sunday Sentinel. A word to the wise, etc. P.l-iknt estimates show that S2,000,fX)(V OcO feet of mercantile white pine standing in ISiO in the lumber States of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, and only al out ÖÖ,()CK), 000, fJOO long leaf pine in Florida, Georgia and the Carolina. But the estimate of long and short leaf in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana end Arkansas was above 1"1,000,COO,000 feet, and this reserve has scarcely been touched yet. Louisiana alone has 4S000,0oO,000 feet standing. The peculiar aspect of the evening sky which attracted so much attention throughout the United States very recently, was noticed in other lands also. A correspondent, writing from Tocopillo under date of October 3, says: "We first observed, on the evening of September '2, that after sunset the sky was overcast with a bright yellow licht, which gradually became orange-colored. It lasted for about half an hour after sunset. Several nights later it wa3 again seen, but the light was redder. It did not appear again until the night after the last new moon, but has been visible almost nightly ever since. It is seen on the greater part of this coast, and also in the interior." REPORT OP SECRETARY OF STATE. Hon. William R. Myers, Secretary of State, has laid upon our table hia report to the Governor for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1883. We are Informed by the report that for the fiscal year named there was paid out for public printing the am of $22,021.20, and for public stationery, fl.713.19; total printing and stationery, $23,731.45. Thereport of the Secretary of State is in many regards a valuable public document. It furnishes the names and residences of all the State officials, United States Senatorsand members of Congress, the names of oCices appointed by the Governor, Secretary of State, Auditor and Treasurer, and x the name ofictrj, appouilcd bf tho Oor-

f rnor. It contains a full list of the Senators ar.d Representatives of the Forty-third General Assembly. Judges of the Circuit, Superior and Criminal Courts, Prosecuting Attorneys. Commissioners of Deeds and County officers. We are informed that there have been OC"! Notaries Public appointed within the last fiscal year, and that 140 Justices of the Peace have also been appointed during the same period. There was tiled in the office of Secretary of State during the llscal year ended October 31, 1SS.5, 30 articles of incorporation and consolidation of railroads, and 204 of Manufacturing, Mining, Banking. Insurance, and Building and Ioan Companies. The official register is valuable for reference, as it furnishes a full list of the Territorial and State officials of Indiana, Senators and members of Congress from the year 1S0O to the present, as also the vote for Congressmen in 1332 by Counties. In many regards the report would le a valuaable addition to the library of the State.

THE DEAD. A certain class of croakers are forever declaiming against death, as if it were not as much in harmony with the law as to be born. We are told that death is the penalty decreed for sin or rather for Adam's transgression that is to say, if Adam had not violated the command not to eat a certain variety of fruit, which gre-v and ripened in the Garden of Eden, there would have been no death in the world. We are inclined to the opinion that a serious inaccuracy has crept into the account since, if all who have been born since the date of the birth of Adam's first child were living now, thy would be required to subsist on air, and it is questionable if each could obtain a good square breath of that article once a minute. Anyone given to arithmetical calculations would find that the surface of the globe, or that portion of it, known as dry land, would be if death had not come to the rescue, too densely packed with human beings for comfort. But, considering death as a penalty, was it decreed against all things having life on account of Adam's sin from the moth that flits near the student's lamp or basks in the sunshine, t trie tallest intellect that digniGes and adorns mankind? We sorrow for the dead. We build monuments to the dead. We wear crape for the dead. We make death appear us a calamity of immeasurable proportions. Once in a while a philosopher appears and speaks in praise of death. Bryant dedicated a hymn to death, and said: "The world hath slandered thee. And mocked thef. Un thy dim and .idowr brow They place rn iron crown and call thee King Of Terrors and the spoiler of t.lo world, Deadly assassin, that strlk'st down the fair. The loved the good that breathest on t-ie lights Of virtue set along the vale of liie. And they go out ia darkness. I am come. Not with reproaches, not with cries and prayers. Such a.- have stormed the stern, insensible ear From the beginning; I am come to speak Tny praise." We read of an old IJuddhist proverb which says: "It is letter to walk than to run; it is better to ride than to walk; it is better to lie down than to ride; it is better to sleep than to lie down; it Is better to die than to sleep' Those heathens would make death the climax of felicity. There are those who discourse in ecstatic phrase of the life to come, which can come only by the agency of death. It is far better to conteinp'ate death as a universal friend than an all-reaching enemy. Misfortunes, old age with its infirmities, have no better friend than death. Death dries tear fountains and hushes the moanings of the oppressed, and gives liberty to the slave. Death enters the home where poverty and rags, cold and hunger and despair are guests, and solves problems which bother the heads of those w ho have charge of charity funds and Benevolent Bureaus; touches the hearts of the miserable,"and at once levels them up to the plane of Kings. What the world calls fortune, friendship, love, charity, even Christianity, have their favorites. They distinguish and classify but death, though he is said to love a shining mark, embraces the poor as lovingly as he docs the rich. Death, like God. is no respector of persons lie is as much at home in a hovel as in a palace, ani by the fiat of fate a pauper on bis cooling hoard isaa grand as a Monarch in his reyal winding sheet. It is the law of nature to die, and Marcus Anrellus struck a key-note when he said. "Whatever is agreeable to thee, O Nature, is is agreeable to me." It is said that "a world without death would be old, worn out, and to this annihilation would be preferable. Pcathi3 to us, as to Christ, transfiguration. Our own experience teaches us that it not only makes us kind, but makes us just. To many death means reconciliation. Death is to millions the bearer of a. glorious hope. Thoueh science should convince us that belief in immortality is irrational, it can never persuade us that the belief is not a grandeur in itself, an ennobling and deifying element in our nature." There is felicity in the pangs which death indicts, and the living say : "Coiac, thoughts that breathe. Come, words that burn, There's anguish in My ceaseless yearn , For loved ones pone to come no more. Kor loved ones oa that sUitiin shore. That voiceless shore, Where loved oiks bide, A nd tva t and watch Thef-urRin tide. Watrn end wait to see tny hari Liuerving from the valley dark. Come, thoughts that hrea'.-'ic, tome, words that burn. And nealc to me of lovver and urn: Of dcalh. thsf makes the futnro bright, And changes darkness iuto llht." RANCH AND RICHES. The desire for wealth pervades all classes In its incipient development there ia seldom more than an ordinary ambition to "get on in the world," to have the conveniences and comforts of life, to be beyond the grasp of penury, and to rank with those who are known as simply "independent" N13ut, as accumulations increase, an all-absoibing yearning sets in to be possessed of h?-rge estates, to be known as a capitalist, as millionaire, It is by n means prudent to stigmatize such aspirations, or to charge them to motives born of meanness. There is such a thing as righteousness in riches. Bich men can and do get into the Kingdom of Heaven. There ia no just argument to be used against an Lonest and honorable accumulation of wealth, and only small men envy rich men their possessions. Men of wealth, are severely criticised on account of their possessions, when it is known or believed that they have grown rich by means which are inconsistent with things of good report. It would be easy enough in this connection to particularize were it required. But such Is not the purpose of this writing. Nor are we disposed to hoojilir.e in regard to the thousand teaipUUop. wUiek luit tuea, atnioy U L$

r:eo, from the paths of rectitude and change' manly ambitions to base designs. There are many ways to prow rich. Intelligence, integrity and industry will secure men a good living, and a man is rich who h.is enough to satisfy prudent wants. Befides, such virtues as we have named ou-ht to be the basis of all great fortunes, and w hen such is the case, wealth and wisdom go hand in hand, and the world is better by virtue of such prosperity. Every one can not "striKe ile," discover a gold or silver mine, or in other ways leap from Indigency to wealth. Nor is it desirable that such should te the case. Fortunes slowly accumulated are best for their possessors, and for society at laree. Under such circumstances money is seldom productive of follies, on the contrary it combines with skill and muscle, and in numerous ways becomes a blessing, the benefits of which it would be difficult to catalogue. We are informed by General James S Brisbin, U. S. A , in the Agricultural Review for December, that there are men now living west of the Missouri River who will probably die possessed of $300,000.000. The General does not refer particularly to those who will own bonanza mines, water railroad stock, or manage to take possession of an undue share of the public lands, but rather to those who go to the great Northwest and engage in raising cattle. Tbe General refers to the fact that "it is not long since a man who had f 1,000,000 was considered a very rich man, and Stephen Girard and John Jacob Astor, with their 3,000, 000 to $10,000,000, were the wonder of a Nation; now every little village ha9 its millionaire, ten, twenty, thirty, forty and even flftymillions, is the measure of individual wealth. Stephen Girard and John Jacob Astor would look meanly enough, in point of wealth, beside the William II. Vanderbilts. Jay Goulds, or the Stamfords of today. Yet, rich as these men are, they are merely tbe Astors and Girards of their day, and will compare slightly enough with the future rich men of oar country." The General also alludes to the incident that men differ widely as to the amount of money required for a fortune, some putting it at a iuiliion, others at two, three or five millions, while he thinks that an income of $1,000 a month ought to be satisfactory to the great majority of fortune hunters, and that a cattle ranch in the great Northwest is the business that will secure such a fortune with greater certainty than any other with which he is acquainted. He says. "Of all the methods of maUng money easily and rapidly out West, of late years, perhaps none ha excelled that of stock rais-m. A man gels a few cows, waits a few years, and la: be has a herd, lie has bought io 1 ia i, cut no Lay and had no herder. His cattle have grossed on the public domain, living summer and winter on the nutriclou grasses of the country; all he has hid to do ha been to round thein up twice a year, put ais brand upon them and let them run. His herd yields him first S"IX, then f 1.0.0, then 2,K'0, $",0.9, SIO.OW per year in beef, aad almost before he knows it he is a rich man. 0 The average cost of raising a steer on the plains is from sixty cents to one dollar rer year, so that a four year old steer, raised from

a Calf, represents a co-t of about St when ready tor market. He will then brins J.X) to $25. if sold on the range, and if driven to the railroad, S'O to S:S. That would appear to be profit enough to satisfy moderate ambitions, and is doubtless about the facts in the case. The General further fays: Suppose a youns man wishes to go iuto cattle. and has a little ready money, he Invests say $1,20 j in IjO yearling heifer. $100 In twelve yearling steers, and $1C0 In young bulls, and $3)0 In ranch improvements. He now has SI, G00 at stake, and say 1100 left in cash. Then, if he will live economically and attend to his own business, he can easily live on J100 for two yearsand pay all necessary expenses. lie then has his living provided for, at the end of which time he can sell ten three-year-old Ftecrs for at least 225, and can from time to time sell a few younger steers to meet necessary expenses. JJany heifers will calve when two years old, but we will ouly credit tbcm with sO ver cent, increase at three years. Say he commences in 11. lalSSG the in crease will be 120 head; in 14, 120: in IsSo, 120; ia it will belGS; in lS.s7, 216, and so on. Ha will, In 887, have been In business six yean, and his herd of V) will have increased to aO-l, less an annual loss of 2 per cent., and necessary sales to keep up expense"', which would leave, say 850 cat tie, old and youn', worth an averaare of 20 per head $17,000. Ue will now have laid tbe foundation for a fortune, and his profits will just be be ginning to be felt. II in tie next four years he is careful in management, and has no extraordinary losses, ho will be worth $10,000 to S50.C0O, and may sell, first 5,000, then 7,DO0, then f 10,000, and ulti mutely ?25,OyO worth of beef per annum. There is something fascinating in such statements. Fora man to invest $1,0' 10 in young cattle, and in the course of tea years make the business pay from $10,0X) to $25,CO'J a j ear, is well calculated to excite the ambition of a certain class of young men w!i; like adventure and are willing to go West and grow rich, lliclies secured by raising cattle 13 the riglit sort of stock speculation. Tin ro is a certain kind of nobility about it which does not attach to cornering wheat or hi tti;i; on margins. General Dri bin. in Iiis Keview article, furnishes numerous tabulated statements showing the great profits of cattle raising, well calculate 1 to attract nu n of small means to the Northwest, who desire to row rich by methods in barmcuy with the best interests of the country. The Washington Republican seems to be '011 to' Hub Injxcrsoll's little scheine. It says : "S,r.ip 1 eoj le,' said the ex Governor of Ma-y-hind, "thought thsit Hoo Inirftrsoll was crazy or a fool became he made suvh a fu-s over t:ie3dor;me Court livcisiou in the civil rights case, 1 üa;'s where some people were mistaken. Iiucr-oli knows that it is a uood tiling for hi:n to l-o a del egate to National Kt publican Conventions. When he pave up his lenience in Illinois ho tried to he a delegate from his District. Everything was property arranged to that end, when a black rann got up in the Jiifctriet Convention ot black men and aked: 'Poes Hob Jngersoll love Jesus?' It was unauiinously deeded tbat he didn't, and they said: 'Away with him.' They didn'tsend him to tbe National Convention. Ily und by the Supreme Court make a little decision, Mid insiersou says thrt the parlor is none too pood for the black man. Do you think any black man will inquire whether lnsroll loves Jesus next time? Not much. Ingerscll will be a dclevato to the next Convention and will nominate Llaine or somebody, aad the whole American people will center in Ingersoll again for the time being." rteferrine to thu distinguished Senator from Ohio, Mr. Pendleton, the New York Daily News says: There is no man in Oblo neekinz tbe RcnatorshlD so much entitled to it at. the present Incumbent, tieorge H. Pendleton. Mr. Pendleton ha; long been one of the foremost men In the Democratic party, and through many years of darkness and defeat for the party he has never faltered in the faith. Hia parity and Integrity in the public tvicc have never been questioned, and be has well earned and richly deserves the continued Indorsement ol the party In his Btate. By courtesy, too, and the custom of the Democracy, be should have a second term. His re-election would give general satisfaction to the people and tho Democracy of the country, and be bailed as deserved justice to a true public acrvant and a worthy man. Gexeral Pr tor, while in England, had some experience with London reporters. "They are not to be com oared to New York reporters,' he said. "Why, wLto 1 told them I bad nothing toaav they went away at once. Only one of them showed any persistency, and I found that he had once been

VA It I ET I KS.

General U. 8. Giu.NTwiU Lercaftcr be known as ! Farmer Grant, as he has recntly purchased the P'operty formerly owned by the heirs of Annie Close, in North fcalem, Winchester County, New York. H:a ton. Ulyfses 8. Orant. owns a neighboring farm, once the property ol Libby, the owuer of the old Lib dj House in New York City. Mks. Langtisy will not have a profound respect for Mr. Carlisle, the new Speaker. When her agent approached hira and pskca wl.at night he would accept a box to witness Lan?try's performance, he atked: "Why is he, auywav? I never heard of him." Poor Lily! After all her swell an Amvriean et.itomin did not even know her sex. A Leios. Mich., has a ladies' brass band. Thess ladies have a great and terrible responsibility retlb" on their shoulders, or rather luns. That they seem to have an idea of this great responsibility is evinced by the fact she who thumps tbe bas3 drum is a widow and mother of nine children. What a glorious qualification that woman has for the position of drum thumper. One of the daughters ot Rev. De Witt Talmase bad a most interesting experience the other evening. She was playing "Nearer. My God, to Thee," oa the parlor melodeon, when a burglar, whoso special mission led tim in that direction, came ud to the bay window and laid his tools down in readiness to go to work. He listened ; a tear stole Into his eye. He repacked his kit, turned away, and vanished in the darkness. Miss Marv Ann Keli, ased eighty-six years died the other nteht at Oakhill. near Baltimore,. Md. She wa3 a daughter of Judge Thomas Kell, ef revolutionary fame. In Washington, at her father's hospitable board, bo entertained Lafayette, Webster, Clay and Calhoun. At the historical ball given to Lafayette in Baltimore by the city, in the Patterson mansion, she was the relguirg attraction. At the time of her death she still had the ball dress worn by her oa that occasion. Early in life she was sadly disappointed in love, and remained unmarried all her life. It is not generally known that there is a gold mine in Stanley County, N. C, owned by the late I'resident James A. Garfield. The mine is known as the Flagtown Mine, and was bought by the President shortly before he was assassinated. President Garfield not only bought the mine, but established at the mine a Postoffice called Flagtown. Tho mine has been lying idle, but the man in charge of the property hai received a letter from Mrs. Garfield stating that she intends to visit the m ne In person next summer, and make arrangements to have it properly worked. Says Sub Kosa in the Washington Capital : Victoria C. Woodl.ull is said to be living a quiet domestic life in England as the wife of Mr. John Biddulpli Martin, a wealthy banker to whom, she was married four years ago. She seems to bo a fort u 1 a to woman. What has become of Tennie C. Claftin, I wonder? Borne years ago there was a great stir because it was report -d that a daughter of Mrs. Woodhuli had been married to a aoa of tho Dcke of Arsyle' Lord Cumpbvll The near relation ship of this yuuui man to the Princess Louise made the report of such a marriage an interaational svüsküoii. Until turned out that the young orran was of Irish parentage. Now it comes out that Lord Campbell is obti:iiii a divorce from his young wife, and tiiat the cas-.i is sitch a scandalous one an order has been made that the testimony should be tal.cn in priviite, a very unusaal nro-cc-eding. T LAi iu," s;iys Fannie 15. Ward iu a U tter from Mexico, "grow? everywhere in Mexico, but more thriftily in the tropical lowlands of the terra caliente. It is a harmless-looking plant, much resembling Northern mrlkweed, and iuite too dangerously convenient in a land where suspicion rules and jealousy amounts to madness. It does not kill, bat acts immediately "pon the brain, producing lirsi violent insanity and then hopeles idiocy. It Is whispered that poor Carlotta had hardly landed at Vera Cruz, on her sorrowful mission to this country, before some of it was administered to her, and her d;piorable fate is cited as one anions many Instance". Of all the dangers in Mexico this is one of the most appalling. Any political enemy, or jealous rival, or offended servant, may thus revenge himself in a more fiendish manner than with the stiletto, and without fear of detection; a few drops of this tasteless white fluid, mixed with milk or other food, doc 8 its diabolical work with inexorable certainty, and can only be detected by Its gradual refcUltS." OPINIONS OK T1IK STATK PUKSS. Give us a Democratic President, both branches of Congrtss aud a revision of the tariff, an t appropriate the funds that are stolen by Republican thieves to pay oä" the public debt, and the pe jple will be happy and th3 country will prosper. Titon Times. Thf.ke is gteat depression of trade in the coal repJons of Pennsylvania, and work la many of the mines has been suspended. Thousmds of miners arooutof employment, and the prospects for that class of laborers are gloomy. The Republican organs will attribute the dullness of the coal trade to the free trade policy that haunts their Imaginations. Richmend Democrat. Yes Carlisle is a Democrat HI home is In Kentucky. He believes that the people should not be taxed any more than is necessary to raise enough mouey to defray the expenses of . Government. This same Carlisle has beon elected Speaker of the House, and thereat the KepubliCitn press are not happy. They want the people taxed beyond the revenue rolnt. Protection is what they cull it. Huntington Democrat. Eow do yen like oni'of these cowardly, sbecp111111?, vI.inins sort of fellows who ueversee anything good accomplished, but are always pecking away at that thing, and can always bo counted on toteliyoa something UDplja'aat? If we were called upon by the handsomest yonn lady in fc'iH'H y ville to pick h.r out a husband we would avoid that kind of a cross-griuned biped as we would a reptile, bliun him, flee from him, hide fiom him. but if you should ever get a squaro look at the crtaturs make facta at him and thro caf etine pepper in his eyes. Shelby Democrat. It appears tbat la-.t wec, aitar Consre-rs had taten some action, the Stute t p.i"tta;nt communicated at once with Minister bo tell at London In regard toO'Donnell. but ths British Government paid no attenfiou to the demand or a suspension ol his scntenae. In this matter it seems onr Government; Conres, Cabinet, Minister and all were rout;dly snubbed. This Cumes of bavins no ntvy. Any second or third rate power could Insult us jmt as England has done: millions upon millions have been Fpent iu fitiiu up and reflttln.5 our rotten navy, butall to no purpo.c.-Frankfort Crescent. The republican party has eettled upou June :, 1SS1. and Chicago as the place of holding thiir National Convention. Their last Convention was held In that city, and Indiana delegates and vis itors who attended are not yet done squealing over the high price they were compelled to pay for beer by the Baloons of the Garden City. It la understood that the National Committee will require Chicago to give a guarantee that the price of that beverage shall not be placed at a higher figure than five cents per class during the session of the next Convention. Republicans will not kick on the rates fixed for board and lodgine, but when they are compelled to pay double price for their beer, it increases their expenses to such an amount that they are unable to grin and bear it. Miami County Sentinel. Beeches don't believe in the Lord's prayer "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver as from evil.' According to Beecher, if parents who want to keep their boys from the habit of intemperpe ranee must "place liquors within their reach." If they want them to keep clear of the filthy habit of chewing tobacco, give them a plug to nibble at when young. If they want them to be virtuous, have them tutored in the way of prostitution. IX they desire them to obey the divine injunction, Mwer not at all." make them familiar with words of blasphemy. Henry Ward Beecher does not believe ia the advice of Solomon, "train up ft child a he way fea HiouiJ go aad wha ue 13 old ha

will not depart from it '' I?e onuM natural phi-lo-ephy a t.l HMiipIur.il authority lr d'.xcardding tbe old maxim, that as "t'ie lwi li beat tlie tree Is inclined."-South Bend bun.

ON TUE UKIUAL TOl'Il. What a Conductor Say About I5ridennd UroouiH. Philadelphia Record. 'Can I penerally tell a bride and rrooru when I see them on a train? Can I? Well. I should rather say so. I haven't been runnin' a Pullman car five years and not learned that little trick," and the parlor car conductor who made the above remark tilted back in his chair in the reading room at tbe Lroad street station yesterday afternoon and chuckled softly to himself, as he blew a cloud of cigar smoke into the air and gazed at it as though he saw there visions of young married couples on their travels. "Yes, sir," be coutinued. after two or three vigorous puffs, "it must be a pretty sharp pair that can fool me when they're on their wedding journey, though about naif of ' em plava their little games very nicely, and t'-ie re?t "of the pas.-ngers don't tumble to the situation at all. Of course there are different sorts of brides and grooms, just as much as there are different sort3 of other people; but I've found that, as a rule, the brides don't care to be taken for such, and try their best to bide tbe interesting fact from the rest of the car, Others don't appear to care a rap, and spoon away just as though therej wasn't any one within a mile of 'em; but that sort's rare, and penerally gets 011 at some country station." "How about tbe man?" "Oh, they tre altogether different, and nine times out of ten it's the man who gives tbe thing away. You see they're so tickled at being married and so proud of their wives that it is as much as the ladies can do to make them act in a disinterested enough way to pass for a friend or a relation or a husband of long BtandiDg. It has to be a powerful strong-minded fellow who can pass several hours in a car and not give any f-isns of his recently acquired happiness. Some of the brides, who are afraid to rely 0:1 their own acting and the promises of their new husbands 'to behave,' carry old valises and handbags that don't look at all bridish, and even bird cages; and I've seen several very young ones that made their husbands tow along a hi bundle of schoolbooks to make people believe that their brothers or cousins were taking thcru back to boarding school.'' "Have you many at this season?" "Scores of 'em; scores of 'ein, sir. It's a great time, this and the spring, though the lively season's about over for the present. If you're going down to Washington 50m day. take uiy train, and if I've got any on board I'll joint them out. ;ood day." And the genial discoverer of brides knocked the ashes from his cii:ar and went out. A Pioneer's Death. John F. Uamsey, for a half-century a citizen of this place, and one of the best known in the city, died ye.terJay morning at Iiis residence, corner of Michigan and Illinois streets. The deceased was born in l'J'i, in Ohio, a;id three years latt-r removed with his parents to this State, locating in JetTersmi County. At that time the present s'te of Madison was occupied by one but. and that belonged t the ferryman. At seven years of ase voting Itamtey was sent to the home of friends in Kentucky in ?der to have hin out of the way of harm from the Indian, who then were verv numerous in the territory now occupied by the State of Indiana. Several years later 1; went to Cincinnati, whore he learned the cabinetmaker's trade. He workid at this as a journeyman in a number of places, and finally opened a shop in Jenuings County, but in he moved to this city and purchased ground near the present site of the Occidental Hotel, which at that time was a corn-field. Here lie erected a shop, in which he carried on the business till his retirement in IStiS. He was marnod twice, first to KlviT.t Ward. His second marriage was to Mrs. Iah (McKeon) Maiott. at Salem, Ind., in lfi-57. Sirs. Malott had two children V. T. Maiott and Mary, afterwards Mrs. S. K. Fletcher, cow deceased. Uy the second marriage there were five children, four of whom are still living, John W. and Robert C. Ramsey, Mrs. Ella Radcliff and Mrs. F.lizabeth Kitzinger. Mr. Ramsey was a zealous member of the Methodist Church, and for half a century held a membership in the Meridian Street Church, formerly Wesley Chapel. His influence was always found 011 tbe sidfl of moral and religious questions, and to him is attributable much of the good that has been accomplished in the city, lie leaves an honored name and many friends who will mourn his death. Indiana Patents. A weekly list of United States patents issued to the inventors of Indiana for the week ending December IS, ls,s3; and eaen. patent in the list will bear that date. Reported expressly for the Indianapolis Daily Sentinel: S. Amick, rittsboroucn. Ind., carpet-stretcher. J. W. Anderstin. South Bend, axle skein. J. C Coulter, Chesterton, railway crossing, J. Dushane. South Bend, dynamo-electric machine. H. J. Elliott, North Manchester, cate. C. A. "roster, r.lkliart. two-wheeled vehicle. J. Krenier, Laporte. wheel. R. Greener, New Albany, ovorsock. M. Hunder, Attica, car-con plins. L. N. Loveland. Ne-.v Haven, sate. K. M. Mcl'aniel. I-afavette, boriui; macliiue. 11. Michael. Laiorle, display rark. . Miller, Kockport. wta iier-boardin? euase. c. A. ThompMiti. Tone Uauto, manufacture ol lüclio urid and hiclics. h. K Todd. Eugene, machine for hulling im) Cleaning train. . c. (;. I'deil, North Iuditinapolis, f-no' stand. G. tiv!ll North IndUnunolis. f-idin? table. O. Vdell. Indianapolis, clot lie drier. L Wilkerson, Scipio, car hrake. 'atrrli. ' The remarkable results in a disease so universal and with such a variety of characteristics as Catarrh, prove how etTectually Hood's irarsaparilla acting through the blood reaches every part of the human system. A medicine, like anything else, can bo fairly judged only by its results. Ve point with, pride to the glorious record Hood's Sarsapari 11a has entered upon the hearts of thousands of people it baa cured of catarrh AYSS'S ; Sarsaparilla ! highly concentrated extract ot Sarsaparilla and other blood-purify In roots, combined with Iodide of Fotaaeium and Iron, and ia the safest, most reliable, and most economical blood-purifier that can be used. It hi variably expela all blood poisons from the system, enriches and renews the blood, and restores Ita vitalizing power. It ia tho bt known remedy for Scrofula and all Scrofulous Complaints, Erysipelas, Eczema, Einffwonn, Blotches, gores, Iloils, Tumors, and Eruption of the Skin, as also for all disorders caused by a thin and impoverished, or corrupted, condition of the blood, such as Rheumatism Neuralgia, Rheumatic Gout, General Debility, aad Scrofulous Catarrh, f Atf.u's Sarsaparilla has eared me of tbe Inflammatory llhmmatUm, Tita vnich I have suffered for many years. W. IL Moon." Durham, Lv, March 2, 1882. PREPARED BT ", Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, f.Tiss. Bol4braULrasiiU; fsitfcHtleiftrf&l

RSI M Tire Cheapest and Csst Maräcin fcr Family Use In tho Yor!d. CCFJa AND PREVENTS Collis, Conghs, Here Tiiroat. UoarMene, Inflammation, Kiieuinntirim, eural:ia. Hcadnrlir, Toulharh, Uiphthrri:. Indunrs, lLficult Hreachlng. THE ONLr PAIN IlE3IEl;iF That lnrtantlystoTJ the most excruciating pains, allays inflammation, and cures congestion, whether of the Luna. Stomach, fcowela or other stands or organs, by one aprUcation, In firon Ono to Twenty llinutea. Ko matter how violent r excrueiatiiK the na'n the Kheumatle, Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, Nenralclc, or prostrated w ith disease may eufier, RADWAY'S KEALY will afford instant ease. Inflaintratlon of the Kidney. iBfiammaiion of the iiladder. Inflammation of the Bowela, CongfPtion of the Lünen. Palpitation of the Heart. , Hysterics, Croup, CatorrX Chilblains. Frost Bites, ' Nervousness, bie-cplessnevn, bciatif-a. Pain in the t"het, Üackcr Limb, lirui.es Spram, Co. Chills and A?!-; Chilli The application of the 1 ady Relief to the part or parts where the dimcu..y or rain eiiu wtA aford ease and comfort. Thirty to sixty drops In half a tumbler of water will la a lew minutes cure Cramns, tpasms, tour StoniBch, Heartburn, Sick Uendache, Diarrhea, Dysentery. Colic, Wind la tha Bowels, and all la-

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IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS. FEVER AND AGUE Cured for Fifty ccatg. There Is not a remedial aeent in this world that will cure Fever and Apn.; nud all other Malarious. Bilious, bcarlet. TyphoM. leuowand other fevers (aided by EADWAVg FILL6) as quickly as RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. Fifty Conts jwr Bottle. HEALTH IS WEALTH. Health of Body is Weilih uf Jliti. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsapariiiion Resolvent Tlie Great Ulood rurifler. Pnr Tlnfwl inalrM tAimd n.K . . a clear ekin. If you would have your flh ßnn, your bones sound without c&rlea and your complexion fair, use ili A V V 4 & A Wl Sarsaparillian Resolvent A remedy composed or inpredlrats of extraordinary medical properties, essential to purifv, heal, repair and invigorate the broken down aad wasted body Quick, 1'leasaat, Safe arid Permanent in Its treatment and en re. Ivo matter by what name the complaint may be desipr.ated, whether it be scrofula, consumption, syphilis, ulcers, sores, tumors, boils, erysipel&s or salt rheum, diseases of the luugs, kidneys, blal- . der, womb, skin, liver stomacn or bowels, either chronic or constitutional, the virus is in ta BLOOD, which supplies the waste and builds and repairs these organs and wasted tissues of the System. If the blood is unhealthy the procata of repair must be unsound. The Sarsaparillian Resolvent Kot only Is a compensating remedy, but sneure the harmonious action f each of the oirrsns. It establishes throughout the entire system functional harmony and supplies the bloodvessels wi'-h a pure and healtiy current of new life. THE SKIN, After a few days use or the Pareaparm'an, becomes clear and beautifuL Pimples, blotch, black spots and skin eruptions are removed : sore and uicers soon cured. Persons suffering lroa tcroiuia, eruptive diseases ot the eyes, couth, ears, lees, throat and elands, that hri a nmn. lated and spread, either from ul cured dlsea-es or mercury, or from the ue of corrosive subUmate. mayrelv upon a cure li the SarsaparillA kcoa- . tmued 1 fuliickDt Ume to make its impro&sioa et i the system f Olio Dollar a Settle, RADWAY'S Regulating Pills! Ferfert VtirjAtlve, Soothing, Apt -rtu. Without Tain, Alwaya Ktlia'olo hi.4 Natural in Operation. A Yesst&tta Substitute fcr Calces'., rha Great Liver and Sio.nacl Eemedj. t" Perfectly buteless, ele-antly coaled with rwrA gum, purge, reg u Ute, purify, cleanse and streugtnen. Radwat's Pixus. tor the cure of all disorders ot the ßtoirach. Liver, Eowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Kervous DiKoases, Loss ol Appetite, ucauacne, iOn Ptipation, Conti venes, luuifteftion. Dyspepsia, Pilioufness, Fever. Inflammation 01 the Bowels, Piles and all a&nrerous derangements of the Internal Viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals or deleterious drufrs. svObFerve the following symptoms resulttns; from Diseases of the Ditresüve .Organs : Constipation, Inward Piles, Fulness of Blood in the ileal, AoiditTof the Stomach. Nausea. Heartburn frust Of Food, Fullness or Weight tn the Ktcmac. Sour Ecrustationa, ßinklnjrs or llutterincs In urPit of the Etomach, swimming of tne tieao, uur ried and Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at thS Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when lax iv in g posture. ixu or neos oeiorw me diuifever and dull pain 1b the. Head. Deficiency ot Perspiration, Yellowness ot the Bkla and Kvea, Tain in tbe Bide, Chest, Limbs and Sudden Flushes of Heat. BurnkiK in the Flesh. A few dotw of Kaaway's Pills will free the system fiom all the above named diaor Jera. PRICE, 25 CENTS PEß BOX; SOU) BY DRUGGISTS. ZAD 'TALES AND TKUK." Send a letter stamp to RADWAY a ,nn twL rvtrnor (TYinreh. Nw 1 AT A CO., Ko. ft ew York. 1 will b seat TV-J in. k Information worth thousands will TO IHK PUBLIC Be tti re and ak for Rad way's, aal tea that DJ nant "cUaair" feoa wfcw tca tay;

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